Check the blog for the full review.

Patrick
www.fantasyhotlist.blogspot.com
Moderator: I'm Murrin
I read those recently and enjoyed them all. Predictable.. yeah. But most fantasy books are after you have read a few bazillion of them. I usually just put my 'I believe hat' on before I read alot of fantasy books.drew wrote: A few months a go, I struggled through Russel Kirkpatrick's First book of his Fire of Heaven trilogy, Across the Face of the World.
According to the person who gave me the whole trilogy, the second two are much better than the first. I doubt they could be any worse.
It was one of the most boring and predictable stories I've ever read. THe World, is very well thought up, and described (the Author is a Cartographer by trade) but the story was rife with cliche, and eye rolling dreadfulness.
The *best* scene was when a group of five or six rural villagers, including three children, one of whom only had the use of one leg, took out three deadly warriors, who earlier in the book killed everyone in an entire town looking for one person.
I may give the other two books a try later, but probebly not until AFTER Against All Things Ending comes out.
I dropped what I was reading at the time to pick up the Algebraist on the strength of its intriguing title and your uppercase "LOVE."Loremaster wrote:I LOVE that book. The Dwellers are superb.Spiral Jacobs wrote:I started a reread of The Algebraist for my flight to NY (the book weighs a lot less) and even though I know how it ends it's more interesting than that.
I can't count how many times I've read Barker's Weaveworld. Among my all-time Top 10. I LOVE that book!Avatar wrote:...a couple of Clive Barker books...
Hopefully the second tale of Bauchelain and Korbal Broach I requested at the same time will arrive soon-ish.Blood follows : a tale of Bauchelain & Korbal Broach / by Steven Erikson.